SFotD: ‘Lisa’ is the Perfect Sci-Fi Woman Built in a Basement

Why Watch? Anders (Dominic Bogart) works an unfulfilling job making something the mainstream public will probably love (which makes him gag), but at night, he gets to labor away at his passion project. It’s almost everyone’s life story with one small difference: Anders makes robots.

It’s really attention to detail (both the design and the story) that makes this all-too-common sci-fi trope sing with richer tones. Bogart gives a keen performance as a younger Doc Brown on OCD medication. He displays an incredible power that’s locked away in a man who has no choice but to be subdued — from the way he lightly brushes his prototypes hair to how he sees red when an ounce of mustard is spilled by his lovely Lisa.

Of course, while most good science fiction uses the extra breathing room of technology to explore a difficult human theme, the thing that’s kind of brilliant about Lisais how pedestrian it makes the concept of building robots seem. Anders could be doing anything else for employment and the core elements of the story could still be there, but Drew Mylrea‘s short film transforms 2033 into something beautifully quotidian. It’s an everyman with a job a million times cooler than all of ours, and he’s still irritated. Maybe there’s something depressing in it: that even when we’re making mind-blowing robots, we’ll still eventually make that the status quo and ho-hum our way through the cubicle work of quality testing Lisa for delivery. Kind of like how we sit thousands of feet in the air on a 6-hour flight across country and only manage to complain.

With near-flawless production design and a shrewd use of some strong practicals, the science part thankfully never distracts from the fiction. It’s tragic, sharp and truly entertaining, and I wonder if Mylrean is still tweaking his own private version.

A veteran of writing about movies for nearly a decade, Scott Beggs has been the Managing Editor of Film School Rejects since 2009. Despite speculation, he is not actually Walter Mathau's grandson. See? He can't even spell his name right.

More from Around the Web:

Reject Nation

1 Comment

Leave a comment

Comment Policy: No hate speech allowed. If you must argue, please debate intelligently. Comments containing selected keywords or outbound links will be put into moderation to help prevent spam. Film School Rejects reserves the right to delete comments and ban anyone who doesn't follow the rules. We also reserve the right to modify any curse words in your comments and make you look like an idiot. Thank You!